On diaspora dependency

For decades, workers’ remittances have served as a vital lifeline for Pakistan’s economy. During periods of balance-of-payment stresses, declining exports, and constrained external financing, inflows from overseas Pakistanis have repeatedly provided critical breathing space. According to State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) data, remittances reached an unprecedented $38.3 billion in FY25, surging over 26 per cent from the previous year. While this influx has bolstered foreign exchange reserves and sustained household consumption, it simultaneously revi­ves a pressing and uncomfortable inquiry: what are the long-term consequences of excessive dependence on such transfers? A comparison with merchandise exports starkly illustrates the scale of this reliance. SBP balance-of-payments data reveals a persistent pattern where remittances consistently rival or surpass export earnings — an unusual structural imbalance for a large developing economy. In FY25, remittances at $38.3bn decisively outstripped exports, which grew modestly to approximately $32.3bn. This trend, evident over several years, signals a growth model where foreign exchange earned abroad by individuals is supplanting income generated through productive, export-oriented activity. Remittances effectively create a parallel welfare system that mitigates immediate hardship but also allows systemic governance failures to persist unchallenged Remittances, while offering short-term stability, are no substitute for genuine economic productivity in the home country of a nation’s diaspora. Such inflows predominantly fuel consumption rather than long-term investment, unless channelled by robust domestic institutions. In Pakistan’s context, abundant remittances have frequently coincided with anaemic industrial growth and stagnant export diversification. Steady inflows of remittances can inadvertently reduce the urgency for policymakers to enact politically challenging reforms in taxation, energy, industrial policy, and export competitiveness, thereby perpetuating underlying weaknesses. Further economic costs reside in the allocation of remittance income itself. Household-level research, including studies in the Pakistan Social Sciences Review, indicates that most funds are directed towards daily consumption, housing, healthcare, and education. While these expenditures undeniably improve welfare, relatively little is invested in entrepreneurship, productivity-enhancing assets, or technological upgrading. This consumption-heavy allocation gradually erodes the economy’s capacity to gen­­e­rate broad-based employment and expo­rtable surpluses, perpetuating dependency. Moreover, remittance dependence distorts exchange-rate dynamics. Persistent dollar inflows, unaccompanied by commensurate export growth, can sustain an overvalued real exchange rate. This undermines the international competitiveness of domestic producers. The economy thus risks a vicious cycle: weakened exports lead to a wider trade gap, which in turn necessitates ever-greater remittance inflows to finance the gap, further entrenching the structural imbalance. Beyond economics, the social costs of migration-driven remittances are profound yet frequently overlooked. Prolonged overseas employment fractures family structures, inducing emotional stress and altering household dynamics. Increased psychological pressures on left-behind spouses and children, alongside shifting gender roles for which some communities are often unprepared, create multiple social issues. These gradual social adjustments in the era of constantly growing remittances carry significant long-term implications for societal cohesion and collective well-being. In Pakistan’s case, this poses greater risks because remittances’ growth is more due to the departure of a higher number of Pakistanis abroad and not due to an increase in per-capita remittances. Sustained remittance flows also risk fostering a culture of dependency. In communities where migration becomes the paramount aspiration, youth may prioritise emigration over local skills development, entrepreneurship, or participation in the domestic labour market. This gradually weakens local economic ecosystems and reinforces the very conditions that drive outward migration. Furthermore, remittances tend to be geographically and socially concentrated, exacerbating inequalities between recipient and non-recipient communities, thereby creating new socio-economic fissures. The political implications, though subtler, are equally significant. When private remittances enable households to access essential services like health and education, public pressure on the state to deliver these services diminishes. This erosion of the social contract weakens demands for governmental accountability, institutional reform, and performance. Remittances effectively create a parallel welfare system that mitigates immediate hardship but also allows systemic governance failures to persist unchallenged. At a macro-political level, the stabilising function of remittances can cultivate policy complacency. Since inflows steady forex reserves and finance imports, successive governments postpone arduous reforms essential for boosting export competitiveness, industrial upgrading, and job creation. This trade-off — prioritising short-term stability over long-term restructuring — has fundamentally constrained Pakistan’s development trajectory. None of this negates the immense value of remittances. They embody the sacrifices of millions of overseas Pakistanis and remain a crucial buffer for both the national treasury and household resilience. In FY25, record inflows were instrumental in alleviating external pressures at a critical juncture. Nevertheless, an economy that leans more on its diaspora than on its domestic productive capacity faces severe long-term vulnerabilities. Remittances must function as a bridge toward a productivity-driven economy — not as a crutch. Without deliberate policies to channel these flows into productive investment, revive exports, and rebuild the state-citizen compact, Pakistan risks exchanging temporary relief for permanent structural fragility. Published in Dawn, The Business and Finance Weekly, January 12th, 2026